Monday, July 29, 2013

I had a good feeling about this guy, and I'll tell ya he has not let me down. Now, granted, Pope Francis has not written any Earth shattering encyclicals, or even really an Earth shattering off-the-cuff remarks, but his welcoming approach is just so darn refreshing. I mean, first he is visiting prisoners and washing feet which is lovely and inclusive. Then he talks about Jesus saving atheists in this sweet almost Pooh-bear kind of language "...Do good: We will meet one another there." And now he is "not judging" homosexuals. I love this guy!

Now, as I said, nothing he has said or done runs counter to what the Catholic Church has preached all along; everyone knows that Jesus loved prisoners: it's totally in the Bible; Catholics are told on our first Sunday school that God gave his Son to the World, not just Catholics; and John Paul made it very clear that homosexuals are to be treated with sensitivity and welcomed into the Catholic community. It is just so nice to see a leader of the Church actually practicing the Catholic faith instead of running their mouths about their own personal fears and biases.

Frankly, the active antipathy among Catholic leaders against homosexuality is ridiculous. I understand that the Catholic Church sees homosexuality as "disordered" and sinful, but divorce also sinful, and Catholic leaders are not holding rallies against that. Archbishop Timothy Dolan, head of the American Conference of Bishops, who stated in a sermon that divorce is the greatest threat to marriage, still forbid a LGBT group into St. Patrick's Cathedral. He doesn't ban divorced people from entering the Church; why all the focus on homosexuals? I kind of hope that the Pope's recent statements will expose homophobic rhetoric andactionof the leadership for what they actually are: pompous statements made by very old men.

My church actually just participated in the Gay Pride Parade. Amani and I went, but we didn't end up marching; after waiting two and a half hours, our portion of the parade still hadn't moved anywhere near the starting point, so I had to take Amani home. Still, it was really great knowing that there was a vibrant Catholic community that didn't embrace hate. (And Amni learned to say "pretty costume" which was awesome.) I was moved by what my pastor wrote in the bulletin explaining why he marched in the parade. The whole letter is worth the read if you have the time, but this is my favorite part:

"...We are chosen in love and called by love to tell others that they, too, are chosen and loved, not because they can become like us but because they already are like God".